PPPoE Packages in NettPortal are templates that define PPPoE service specifications (time limits, data limits, bandwidth, pricing, and PPPoE profile assignment) for customers to purchase. When customers purchase a package, their PPPoE user account is automatically configured with the package's limits and profile. This comprehensive guide covers everything you need to know about creating and managing PPPoE packages.
🎯 What is a PPPoE Package?
A PPPoE package is a template that defines what service a PPPoE customer will receive—time limits, data limits, bandwidth, pricing, and assigned PPPoE profile. When a customer is assigned a PPPoE package, their PPPoE user account on the router is automatically updated with the package's bandwidth limits, data limits, time limits, and PPPoE profile settings. This allows you to offer standardized service plans to customers.
Navigate to the PPPoE Packages page and click Add PPPoE Package. Here's what you need to configure:
Note: Package bandwidth limits override the profile's rate limits for the specific customer when assigned.
Set a price for the package. Prices are stored in USD and automatically converted to your organization's display currency. Leave empty for free packages.
💡 Tip: PPPoE packages are assigned to customers manually by operators. They don't generate vouchers like Hotspot packages—they directly configure the customer's PPPoE account.
⚡ How PPPoE Packages Work
When a PPPoE package is assigned to a customer, NettPortal automatically updates the customer's PPPoE user account on the router with the package's bandwidth limits, data limits, time limits, and assigns the package's PPPoE profile. If the customer doesn't have a PPPoE user yet, one is created automatically. The customer's connection immediately uses the new package settings.
View and manage PPPoE packages from the PPPoE Packages page:
You can edit packages to update settings, pricing, or status. Changes only affect new assignments—existing customers keep their current package settings until reassigned. Deleting a package removes it from available options but doesn't affect customers already using it.